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Serum S100B and hypothermic circulatory arrest in adults

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Presentation on theme: "Serum S100B and hypothermic circulatory arrest in adults"— Presentation transcript:

1 Serum S100B and hypothermic circulatory arrest in adults
Kausik Bhattacharya, Stephen Westaby, Ravi Pillai, Susan J Standing, Per Johnsson, MD, PhD, David P Taggart, MD  The Annals of Thoracic Surgery  Volume 68, Issue 4, Pages (October 1999) DOI: /S (99)

2 Fig 1 A boxplot graph showing the differences in S100B profiles between the no total circulatory arrest (TCA) group and the TCA group. The whiskers represent the range of the data, the boxes express the upper and lower quartiles and the median is shown by the bold line. Patients who are outliers (more than 1.5 times the interquartile range away from the whiskers are not shown). A = preoperative value; B = at skin closure; C = 5 hours postoperatively; D = 24 hours postoperatively. The median is shown by the bold line. Outliers are represented as circles and extreme outliers are represented by asterisks. The Annals of Thoracic Surgery  , DOI: ( /S (99) )

3 Fig 2 Scattergraphs showing the relation between serum S100B concentrations 5 hours (A) and 24 hours (B) postoperatively and duration of total circulatory arrest. The Annals of Thoracic Surgery  , DOI: ( /S (99) )

4 Fig 3 Trend in serum S100B levels in a patient who sustained a perioperative stroke compared with the rest of the TCA group who had no overt clinical neurologic injury. (Pre-op = preoperative.) The Annals of Thoracic Surgery  , DOI: ( /S (99) )


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